Edward Cohen was among the tiny minority of Jews in Jackson, Mississippi, the heart of the Bible Belt. As a child, he grew up singing “Dixie”in his segregated school and saying sh’ma in synagogue. And in his powerful, luminous memoir, Cohen tells a story as universal as it is particular, at once a deeply personal account of growing up an outsider and a vibrant family story of three generations of American Jews.
To Edward Cohen, it seemed the entire world was Jewish. Then he went to school, where he was the only child who didn’t bow his head during Christian prayers, the only child not invited to dance class.
As the polite ‘50s segued into the racially explosive ‘60s, Jackson, Mississippi, would never be the same. And Edward would escape to the University of Miami in search of a new identity.
There, he thought he would find other Jews and finally gain the acceptance he never had. But once again he found himself an outsider — this time as a southerner.
A stirring memoir for anyone who’s ever felt a loss of identity or pressure to conform, The Peddler’s Grandson is sure to touch readers everywhere who have grappled with who they are.
Edward Cohen was a former head writer and executive producer for Mississippi Educational Television, Cohen has produced a number of documentaries on southern or Jewish subjects, including Good Mornin’ Blues with B.B. King; The Islander, starring James Best; Passover; and Hanukkah, narrated by Ed Asner, all broadcast nationally by PBS. His other documentaries include The Parchman Trials (an exposé of Mississippi’s penal farm), and The Last Confederates (the story of the little known culture of the descendants of the expatriate Confederates who emigrated to Brazil after the Civil War). His documentary work has received numerous international film festival awards, as well as two CINE Golden Eagles.
More recently he wrote, produced, directed and edited The Natchez Jewish Experience for the Museum of the Southern Jewish Experience. The film tells the bittersweet story of a once-thriving congregation in Natchez, Mississippi, now down to a handful of members dedicated to keeping their temple open until the last member shuts out the lights. The documentary won the Judah P. Magnes Museum Muse Award for Best Historical Documentary.
In 1999, he published The Peddler’s Grandson: Growing Up Jewish in Mississippi, a memoir in which he describes growing up in the heart of the Bible Belt in the 1950s. The book was honored by the Mississippi Institute of Arts and Letters as the winner of its nonfiction award in 2000. Cohen also was awarded the Mississippi Authors Award for Nonfiction by the Mississippi Library Association in 2000.
Today, Cohen lives with his wife and three cairn terriers in Venice, California, where he is a freelance writer and filmmaker
Interesting memoir by Edward Cohen about being Jewish in a sea of the Protestant Bible belt in Jackson, Mississippi during the 1950s and 1960s. Cohen's family, descended from Romanian Jews who drifted to the American South as "peddlers" became middle class clothing merchants who struggled to maintain their Jewish identity in one of the more prejudiced parts of the United States during turbulent times.
great book. it was interesting to read about a young jewish boy's view of the south during those turbulent times. i like memoirs and would like to read more of them than i do now. it's a sweet read that i like a lot.
I really loved the view of southern life from the Jewish perspective; its not something you really get insight into very often. Well written, interesting, kept me reading.
An enjoyable and easy read. It was interesting to read of his experience growing up Jewish in such a non-Jewish world. It left me sad though; knowing what his grandparents and great-grandparents went through to leave Europe for America, this seems to be the end of the Jewish line for them.
I was surprised by the lack of anti-semitism that the author encountered in Jackson, Mississippi. I guess I assumed that it would be worse in civil rights era Mississippi. Most of the focus lay on a divided identity (Southern and Jewish) and the insularity of living as Jews in the South, similar to the immigrant experience of other groups.
I was especially interested in reading about Jackson in the 1950s-1960s, and wasn't disappointed. I enjoyed reading about the intersection of the author's experiences with the civil rights movement.
This book was fascinating to me. The author is almost exactly my age, so we both grew up Jewish in the south at the same time (high school graduating class of 1966). Both us us came from families that owned family businesses with extended family working together in the business. We had many of the same experiences being "other" in a white, southern Christian world, but we also had many unique experiences of our own. Encourages me to get back to writing my own memoir.
I loved this memoir of Ed Cohen's life in Mississippi during one of the most socially and politically difficult times in the state for Jews. Cohen's thoughts on how the Civil Rights Movement affected Mississippi's Jews are so interesting.
This was incredibly enjoyable to read. I learned that religious differences can be truly isolating, even within a racial group, if you are in the religious minority in that place.